CONCERNING ANTI-SEMITIC STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS OF THE DUMA OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

Tuesday, March 23, 1999

CONCERNING ANTI-SEMITIC STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS OF THE DUMA OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATIONHon. Christopher H. Smithof New Jersey

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Mr. Speaker, I move to suspend the rules and agree to the concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res.
37) concerning anti-Semitic statements made by members of the Duma of the Russian Federation, as amended.
Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Mr. Speaker, H. Con. Res. 37 condemns anti-Semitic statements made by members of the Russian Duma and commends
actions taken by fair-minded members of the Duma to censure the purveyors of anti-Semitism within their ranks. H. Con. Res.
37 further commends President Yeltsin and other members of the Russian Government for their rejection of such statements.
Finally, this resolution reiterates the firm belief of the Congress that peace and justice cannot be achieved as long as
governments and legislatures promote policies or let stand destructive remarks based on anti-Semitism, racism, and
xenophobia.
Mr. Speaker, with the fall of the ruble last August and the associated economic problems in Russia, there has been a
disturbing rise in anti-Semitic statements by high Russian political figures. Unfortunately, anti-Semitism has always had a certain
following in Russia; and it would be disingenuous of us to suggest that there is no anti-Semitism in the United States or other
parts of the world. But I believe we cannot remain silent when members of the national legislature of Russia, a participating state
of the OSCE and the Council of Europe, should state at a Duma hearing, as did the chairman of the Duma Security Committee,
Mr. Ilyukhin, that Russian President Yeltsin's ``Jewish entourage'' is responsible for alleged genocide against the Russian
people.
It is an affront to human decency that Duma member and retired General Albert Makashov, speaking twice in November
1998 at public rallies, should refer to ``the Yids'' and other ``reformers and democrats'' as responsible for Russia's problems
and threaten to make a list and ``send them to the other world.''
Mr. Speaker, this man, and I have seen a tape recording of him, as a matter of fact I played it at a Helsinki Commission
hearing that I chaired last January, has said, ``We will remain anti-Semites and we must triumph.'' These are dangerous,
hate-filled sentiments.
Mr. Speaker, it should be noted and clearly stated that President Yeltsin and his government have condemned anti-Semitism
and other expressions of ethnic and religious hatred.
[Time: 14:45]
There have been attempts in the Duma to censure anti-Semitic statements and those who utter them. However, the Duma is
controlled, as we all know, by the Communist Party, where anti-Semitic statements are either supported, or at least tolerated,
and these attempts to censure have failed. So we must go on the record and censure.
In fact, Communist Party Chairman Zyuganov has tried to rationalize anti-Semitic statements by fellow party members. He
explains that the party has nothing against Jews, just Zionism. He has also stated that there will be no more anti-Semitic
statements by General Makashov. But this is the same Mr. Zyuganov who has asserted that, and I quote, ``too many people
with strange-sounding family names mingle in the internal affairs of Russia.'' And this is the party that claims to inherit that
internationalist mantle of the old Communist Party.
Mr. Speaker, on January 15 of this year, I chaired a Helsinki Commission hearing regarding human rights in Russia, at which
time we heard testimony by Lyuda Alexeeva, a former Soviet dissident and chairperson of the Moscow Helsinki Group. She
testified that the Russian people themselves are not anti-Semitic but that the Communist Party is tolerating this crude attitude
among its ranks. She called upon parliamentarians throughout the world to protest in no uncertain terms the position of the
Communist Party and its anti-Semitic leaders. Let us make that a priority for us today, to censure, to speak out so that the
democratic forces in Russia, the decent people who are trying to create a civil society in Russia, are not silenced by these
demagogues of hate.
I urge strong support for this resolution. We must go on record.
Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.